The Real Life Shootout That Inspired HEAT…
Popo Medic Popo Medic
767K subscribers
1,055,459 views
0

 Published On Jan 12, 2023

On March 25th of 1964 professional thief Neil McCauley would come face to face with Chicago Police Detective Chuck Adamson for the last time. The two had played a game of cat and mouse over the course of three years in the Chicago area. Although he didn't agree with his outlawish ways, Detective Adamson couldn't help but admire McCauley and his professional. McCauley excited him as a detective. The two would meet face to face for the first time in 1963 and share a cup of coffee. The two men discovered they shared more in common than either would have thought- but the conversation would with a bitter taste of reality. Knowing full well, they'd put each other down in a second if or when it came to it. And hundreds of rounds later, it came to it.

Chuck Adamson would later trade the Police force for Hollywood. Making a name for himself as a writer with such works as Miami Vice and Crime Story. Adamson told a then young filmmaker Michael Mann about McCauley. Michael Mann was so intrigued by the story that he brought it to the big screen in 1995 as what is now known as HEAT.

Music by Karl Casey @WhiteBatAudio :
Song 1:    • Cyberpunk Synthwave - Dissent // Roya...  
Song 2:    • Cyberpunk Industrial Darksynth - Lice...  
Song 3: Original Score "Mantra" - Unreleased

instagram:   / popoxmedic  
twitter:   / popoxmedic  
twitch:   / popomedic  
discord:   / discord  
patreon:   / popomedic  
second channel:    / @danecannavo  
___________________________________________

business: [email protected]

___________________________________________

All images/graphics/videos are either created, licensed, legally transformed via fair use or permission was obtained from the original owner------- and still all the materials used have been transformed during this production to meet the criteria of fair use under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Learn more below:

Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

show more

Share/Embed